‘Deepwater Horizon’ a visceral true tale – Fall film season looms like an oasis

01/09/2016

This image released by Summit Entertainment shows Mark Wahlberg in a scene from ‘Deepwater Horizon’, in theaters on Sept 30. (AP)

Out with the summer, in with the fall. Please hurry. After a bruising three months when moviegoers often had to strain to find something good to see, this year’s fall film season looms like an oasis. It’s about to get better at the multiplex. Here are 10 movies, performances and story lines that AP film writers Lindsey Bahr and Jake Coyle are most looking forward to, come autumn:

Lonergan-Mania: Little is settled about this fall’s coming awards season except for this: Kenneth Lonergan’s “Manchester by the Sea” (Nov 18) is one of the best films of the year. Already celebrated at its Sundance premiere, it’s the third film from the acclaimed New York playwright following the wonderful “You Can Count on Me” and the criminally underseen “Margaret.” Casey Affleck excels as a small-town New Englander haunted by tragedy. Lonergan’s naturalistic touch and deft feel for the rhythms and details of life remain unmatched. — Jake Coyle

Ang Lee, Innovator: Ang Lee is continually pushing cinema to new technological heights, and his adaptation of “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk” (Nov. 11) is no less ambitious than bringing a hyper realistic CG Bengal tiger to the frames of “Life of Pi.” The first screening will be in 4K, 3D and 120 frames per second — essentially, hyper reality. Oh, and he also manages to meld all that tech talk with some extremely resonant stories. Take us there, Mr Lee — Lindsey Bahr

A more diverse oscars: After two straight years of “OscarsSoWhite” blanketing a dishearteningly homogenous Academy Awards, a richly diverse array of possible nominees is lining up for this season. Though a rape case from the past is clouding the once-bright fortunes of Nate Parker’s “The Birth of a Nation,” a revamped Academy of Motion Pictures may be hard pressed to ignore the likes of Denzel Washington’s “Fences” (Dec 16), Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” (Oct. 21), Theodore Melfi’s “Hidden Figures” (Dec 25) and Jeff Nichols’ interracial marriage tale “Loving” (Nov 4). — Coyle

Female directors to (re)discover: While the percentage of female directors remains dismal, there are a number of exciting projects from new and veteran talents this fall, like the feature debuts of Julia Hart (“Miss Stevens,” Sept 16) and Kelly Fremon Craig (“The Edge of Seventeen,” Nov 18). Also coming are films from exciting veterans like Jocelyn Moorehouse (“The Dressmaker,” Sept 23), Andrea Arnold (“American Honey,” Sept 30) and Kelly Reichardt (“Certain Women,” Oct 14). — Bahr

A legitimately good Shia LaBeouf: Performance-art theatrics have overshadowed the transformation Shia LaBeouf has undergone. He’s made it easy to not take him seriously in recent years, and maybe that’s been the point. But in Andrea Arnold’s Midwest teenage odyssey, “American Honey” (Sept. 30), LaBeouf and breakout star Sasha Lane are exceptional. The film is your opportunity to 1) See why LaBeouf was sporting a rattail last year; 2) Watch him dance to Rihanna on a Walmart check-out counter; and 3) See the vibrant latest from one of the most interesting directors currently working. — Coyle

Emma Stone gets a proper showcase: How do you come off of a dud like “Aloha”? By singing, dancing and romancing your way back into America’s hearts in what could be a career-defining performance in Damien Chazelle’s musical love story “La La Land” (Dec 16) of course. Stone stars as Mia, a struggling actress in Los Angeles who falls for a moody musician in the form of Ryan Gosling. Looking like “Singing in the Rain” meets “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,” ‘’La La Land” — and Stone’s touching melodies and emotive almond eyes — promises to have audiences swooning and sobbing in no time. — Bahr

Old Hollywood through Beatty’s lens: The Golden Age of Hollywood holds a not-so-surprising allure for directors of a certain age, but perhaps none has seemed quite as suited to the task as Warren Beatty, coming off of a 15-year hiatus from acting and an 18-year break from directing with his long-time-coming “Rules Don’t Apply” (Nov 23), once simply known as the Warren Beatty Howard Hughes pic. Beatty plays Hughes, but it looks to be more of a showcase for a youthful romance between an aspiring actress (Lily Collins) and her driver (young Han Solo himself, Alden Ehrenreich). — Bahr

Hailee Steinfeld grows up: Steinfeld was just 13 when she made her Oscar-nominated breakout in the Coen brothers “True Grit” in 2010. In Kelly Fremon Craig’s “The Edge of Seventeen” (Nov 18) — a coming-of-age tale in the John Hughes tradition — her maturation is self-evident. As a whip-smart but confidence-lacking high-schooler, Steinfeld navigates embarrassment after embarrassment with wit and spirit. — Coyle

The understated Mike Mills: Director Mike Mills takes his time between projects, but each is a lovely, whispered little cinematic event, from the tender “Thumbsucker” to the achingly poignant “Beginners.” His latest, “20th Century Women” (Dec 21) takes him back in time to 1979 Santa Barbara, where three women (Annette Bening, Greta Gerwig and Elle Fanning) explore what love and freedom means in their time. — Bahr (AP)